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Incomprehensible   /ɪŋkˌɑmprəhˈɛnsɪbəl/   Listen
Incomprehensible

adjective
1.
Incapable of being explained or accounted for.  Synonym: inexplicable.  "Left the house at three in the morning for inexplicable reasons"  Antonym: explicable.
2.
Difficult to understand.  Synonym: uncomprehensible.  Antonym: comprehensible.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Incomprehensible" Quotes from Famous Books



... out and his arm stiffened but it seemed as though all the muscles of his back had grown stiff. He could not bend. It was strange. It was both ludicrous and incomprehensible. Perhaps he had grown stiff with cold ...
— Riders of the Silences • John Frederick

... authors, journalists, artists, and men of the world. She knew his nerveless nature, his laziness, his utter penury, his indifference and disgust for all things, and yet by the way she was now conducting herself she seemed inclined to marry him. She explained her conduct, incomprehensible to her friends, in various ways,—by ambition, by the dread she felt of a lonely old age; she wanted to confide her future to a superior man, to whom her fortune would be a stepping-stone, and thus increase her own importance ...
— Beatrix • Honore de Balzac

... repealed, is a marvel which no one not acquainted with Mr. Sumner can comprehend. First of all, though he was learned, he was not a lawyer. He was impractical in the affairs of government to a degree that is incomprehensible even to those who knew him. He was in the Senate twenty-three years and the only mark that he left upon the statutes is an amendment to the law relating to naturalization by which Mongolians are excluded from citizenship. The object of his amendment was to save negroes from the ...
— Reminiscences of Sixty Years in Public Affairs, Vol. 2 • George S. Boutwell

... Nothing, to Mrs. Archer's mind, would have been more "undignified" than to force one's self on the notice of a "foreigner" to whom one had happened to render an accidental service. But Mrs. Carfry and her sister, to whom this point of view was unknown, and who would have found it utterly incomprehensible, felt themselves linked by an eternal gratitude to the "delightful Americans" who had been so kind at Botzen. With touching fidelity they seized every chance of meeting Mrs. Archer and Janey in the course of their continental travels, and displayed a supernatural acuteness ...
— The Age of Innocence • Edith Wharton

... over the binder carefully. The various reports were unsigned, but appeared to have been compiled by at least four or five persons—McAllen among them; his writing style was not difficult to recognize. Leaving out much that was incomprehensible or nearly so, Barney could still construe a fairly specific picture of the association project of which he was now an unscheduled and unwilling part. Selected plants and animals had been moved from Earth through the McAllen Tube to a world consisting ...
— Gone Fishing • James H. Schmitz


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